1 / 9

Solidarity and Politeness

Solidarity and Politeness. Drs. Liliek Soepriatmadji, M.Pd. adjusting words to fit occasion. Maintaining face Respect Self-esteem Avoid open disagreement, personal topics Avoid Face Threatening Acts (FTA's) Use politeness strategies: 1. DO FTA: 1. Bald On Record

arnav
Download Presentation

Solidarity and Politeness

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Solidarity and Politeness Drs. Liliek Soepriatmadji, M.Pd.

  2. adjusting words to fit occasion • Maintaining face • Respect • Self-esteem • Avoid open disagreement, personal topics • Avoid Face Threatening Acts (FTA's) • Use politeness strategies: • 1. DO FTA: • 1. Bald On Record • no effort to minimize threats to the "face“ • 2a. Positive Politeness • in some way imposing/forcing • 2b. Negative Politeness • confirm that the relationship is friendly • 3. Off-Record-indirect strategy • no direct imposition/force • 2. DON’T DO FTA

  3. FTA • face-threatening act • negative face (the act impeding the freedom of actions) • positive face (the wish that one’s wants be desired by others) • language function are resources of FTA • Requests potentially threaten one’s face because they may restrict the freedom to act according to one’s will • Refusals may threaten one’s positive face because he may be disfavoured

  4. Strategies following an FTA • 1. Without redressive action: direct refusals, such as “I refuse”. • 2. On record (with redressive action): explicit refusal (+) with or without politeness strategy (-). • 3. Off record: no explicit refusal but with a hint indicating speaker’s refusal. • 4. Don’t do the FTA: giving up refusing.

  5. Respect representation • Honorific (polite speech) • Softening devices: • Hedges • Question • Indirect expression • Address term • Soft volume • Low pitch • Avoid slangs and taboo/dirty words

  6. Directness and Indirectness • The use of vocative • The use of direct expression, as in: • Offer: • Can I take you some drink, please? • Imperative: • Do you mind if you open the door? • I need to be alone.

  7. Factors affecting directness • Age: the old tend to be more indirect than the young. • Sex: females prefer indirect expression. • Residence: the rural population tends to use more indirectness than the urban. • Mood: while angry, people tend to use more directness. • Occupation: those who study social sciences tend to use more indirectness than those who study natural sciences. • Personality: the extroverted tend to use more directness than the introverted. • Topic: while referring to a sensitive topic, a taboo, people usually opt for indirectness (euphemism). • Place: when at home, people tend to use more directness than when they are elsewhere. • Communicative environment/setting: when in an informal climate, people tend to express themselves in a direct way. • Social distance: those who have closer relations tend to talk in a more direct way. • Time pressure: when in a hurry, people are likely to use direct expressions. • Position: when in a superior position, people tend to use more directness to their inferiors.

  8. harmonious interaction • Goffman (1967): politeness as appreciation through avoidance or presentation of rituals • Leech (1983): politeness as forms of behaviour aimed at creating and maintaining harmonious interaction • Politeness Principle (Leech): • Tact maxim: Minimize cost to other. Maximize benefit to other. • Generosity maxim: Minimize benefit to self. Maximize cost to self. • Approbation maxim: Minimize dispraise of other. Maximize dispraise of self. • Modesty maxim: Minimize praise of self. Maximize praise of other. • Agreement maxim: Minimize disagreement between self and other. Maximize agreement between self and other. • Sympathy maxim: Minimize antipathy between self and other. Maximize sympathy between self and other.

  9. Factors determining politeness behaviours • Leech, 1983; Brown and Levinson, 1987: • Social distance (intimate, acquaintance, stranger) • Social status(low, high, equal) • Gender(same gender, opposite gender)

More Related